Harvey Frommer / Players Yankees
Remembering
Yankee Stadium - Excerpts
Barnstorming
Around America with the 1927 New York Yankees
Remembering
Yankee Stadium: All-Star Games
Roll
out the Barrel: The 1927 Yankees
An
Oral and Narrative History of The House That Ruth Built
REMEMBERING YANKEE STADIUM
AN
ORAL AND NARRATIVE HISTORY
OF THE HOUSE THAT RUTH BUILT
BY HARVEY FROMMER
Thanks- I'll wait to hear from the
publicist.
The
definitive work on YANKEE STADIUM, my newest book (and seventh with New York
Yankee content), will be published by (Stewart, Tabori, Chang/Abrams)
fall 2008.
I am booking speaking appearances, book store signings,
interviews, displays, museum exhibits, excerpts, internet postings, reviews,
publicity and marketing ops for the book.
==========================================
This
is the only book with a foreword by Bob Sheppard, the New York Yankees
legendary public address announcer.
=====================================
It mixes and matches voices from as far back as the 1920s to
today providing the perspective
of the rank and file who give the nitty gritty that the you wont find
from heavier names, those who will say over and over again: When I
stepped out onto the Stadium . . .
Instead, nearly one hundred voices give the book a sense
of place and time and people. There are Hall of Famers, bat boys, fans, vendors,
famed broadcasters and authors, Yankee players and managers as well as their
rivals, and long-time observers of the Stadium scene. There are game calls
from legends like Mel Allen, Frank Messer, Phil Rizzuto, Michael
Kay.
There is the smell of mustard and the smell of jockstraps, the feel
of being crushed, eight deep on the downtown D train after a game. And a
sense of place you won't find in any "official" history enhanced by more
than 200 images, many of them archival and many never before published in
a book. There are ticket stubs, baseball cards, program covers, scorecards.
And there is a large
Stadiumology
section with stats and facts, first and lasts.
==========================
I
learned many things about Yankee Stadium through writing this book. Here
are 23 of them:
1.
Some wanted the brand new Yankee Stadium in 1923 to be called "Ruth
Stadium." They settled for the nick-name "the House That Ruth
Built."
2. It took 500 workers 185 days to build
the original Yankee Stadium.
3. At the start, names of Yankee
players were imprinted in white chalk
near the top of their
lockers.
4.
The practice of selling more tickets than existing seats endured until
a 1929 stampede in the right
field bleachers left two dead,
62 injured.
5.
Negro League teams who played at the Stadium when the Yanks were on the road
were not allowed to use the Yankee dressing rooms. Instead they were obliged
to use the visitors dressing room.
6. "Lou Gehrig Appreciation
Day" was staged
before 61,808 on July
4, 1939 and his uniform number 4 was the first in baseball
history to be
retired.
7. In 1941, Yankee president Ed Barrow
offered Civil Defense the use of
Yankee Stadium as a bomb shelter
in case of attack. He thought the area
under the stands could provide
a safe haven.
8. On August 16,
1948, Babe Ruth died of throat
cancer at age 53. His body lay in state at Yankee Stadium and was viewed
by more than 100,000 fans.
9.
The last home run at the original Yankee Stadium
on September 30, 1973
was hit by Duke Sims in his
seventh day as a Yankee. A coin toss that day
tabbed him to play. It was not
until much later that Sims realized the
significance of his home run
shot.
10.
The film "61" was filmed in
Detroit, not at Yankee Stadium. Billy
Crystal explained the Motor
City ballpark architecture was better able to be
made to resemble that of the
Yankee Stadium of 1961.
11. Sal Durante, the guy who caught the
ball Roger Maris hit for his 61st homer, bought tickets the day of the game
at a less-than-sold- out Yankee
Stadium.
12. Mickey Mantle originally wore Number
6, but equipment manager Pete Sheehy switched him to Number 7 after Mantle
was recalled from Kansas City.
13. Twenty thousand
letters that Mickey Mantle never
answered were not bid on in the old Yankee Stadium fire sale in
1974.
14.
There was widespread and indiscriminate disposal of valuable items during
demolition of much of the Stadium in the mid 1970s.
15.
Among the items sold in the refurbishment "fire sale" at
Yankee
Stadium
were player jockstraps which had names on them for identification when they
came back from the laundry. The selling
was stopped because of sanitary reasons.
16. In 1976, a homer by Chris Chambliss
gave the Yankees the American League pennant. Such a mob crowded the plate
that Chambliss was taken back a few minutes after hitting the homer, and
he finally touched home plate.
17.
All kinds of crazy things went on in the bullpens - some of
them
outlandish
and some of them sexy and lots having to do with food.
18. In 1988, behind a wall that
was closed off for decades, a scorecard, a program and what was supposedly
the bases for the 1936 team were unearthed.
19. The 1990 Yankees had but one starting
pitcher who won more than seven games, nine-game winner Tim Leary. But he
also lost 19.
20. On September 11, 2001 within 90 minutes
of the horrific attacks on the World Trade Center, Yankee Stadium
was
evacuated.
21.
Ron Guidry, a good drummer, once kept a trap set at Yankee Stadium and
also played in a post-game concert
with the Beach Boys.
22.
Joe Torre was witness to all three perfect games in Yankee Stadium history:
He saw Don Larsen's beauty as a 16-year-old fan, and the gems spun by David
Wells and David Cone from the dugout as Yankee manager.
23. Bob Sheppard holds
the record for seeing the most games at Yankee Stadium.
**Please check out my home page for more info on me:
Sports:
http://harveyfrommersports.com/index.htm
o
"Harvey
Frommer brings a vast amount of experience in the art of the oral history,
one of the many tools at the disposal of the historian. From his Shoeless
Joe and Ragtime Baseball to Red Sox-Yankees The Great Rivalry, Frommer shows
that he is a baseball writer and historian of repute."
-SABR executive director John Zajc.
o
"First
among equals is Harvey Frommer, with his wife Myrna Katz Frommer, a great
expert on all things baseball and New York (and that city within a
city,) Brooklyn" -- John Thorn, Baseball Historian